All Property Week articles in 14 December 2001
View all stories from this issue.
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News
Salmon restructures top management
Reshuffle follows withdrawal of £80m development joint venture sale
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Insight
Property for the people: let's lobby the Mandelson way
Industry must appeal to the interests of the public
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News
Rapleys wins whopper property instruction
Burger King has instructed surveying firm Rapleys to manage its 400-strong portfolio of fast-food outlets around the country.
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Markets
Hotel hoodoo
Hotels have taken a hammering in 2001, and industry analysts are uncertain about what will happen in the sector.
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Markets
The Omega factor
English Partnership's selection of an office-led bid for a £1bn development in Warrington was a surprising choice.
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News
Scot recruits at Montagu Evans
Montagu Evans has signalled its intent to increase its property investment profile in Scotland, after making two key appointments this week.
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News
LandSec swoops for entrepreneur
Peter Freeman, co-founder of the Argent Group and chairman of Freeman Publishing, has been appointed a non-executive director of Land Securities.
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News
Green Paper: fees for ease and speed
Developers to pay for simpler system under government planning reforms
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Insight
A dedicated follower of fashion
Pinault-Printemps-Redoute is making serious inroads into the luxury clothing market with the acquisition of Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent. We talk to its chief executive
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News
Management and support staff to go in JLL job cuts
Top agent retains agency and investment strength and will focus on growing business next year
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News
Marks man hits City spot
Marks & Spencer's sales are picking up. We talk to the property chief whose task it is to rethink one of Britain's biggest portfolios
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News
Inner City
When 'Black' Jack Dellal sold Bush House in 1989 to Japanese investors for £130m two years after buying it for £55m, he sealed his reputation as one of the property's top dealmakers and was universally lauded.
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Markets
Cheshire: top shopping locations
The map shows the proportion of overall shopping populations in each trading location visiting for convenience and comparison-goods shopping purposes. Because consumers generally shop more often for food, visitor numbers to trading locations containing main grocery offers will always be higher than those of centres with similar-sized regular shopping populations. ...
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Insight
One extravagant European project turns out to be a worthy cause
I could not possibly take a view on the merits of the argument between the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and its landlord.
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Markets
Industrial: Cheshire caught
Large requirements will remain unsatisfied until Omega is on stream
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News
Stonemartin and CapCo lift SME market
Quoted companies announce expansion plans for managed workspace sector